Lessons for the U.S. from Japan's Lost Decade
Facing an economic downturn in the 1990s, Japan racked up debt. America should not repeat that mistake.
Facing an economic downturn in the 1990s, Japan racked up debt. America should not repeat that mistake.
A few reasons to remain calm about the economy
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A key indicator has predicted every recession since 1970, and the alarm just sounded.
The New Right talks a big populist game, but their policies hurt the people they're supposed to help.
Growth of regulation slowed under former President Trump, but it still increased.
The conservative culture war boycott against Bud Light was actually a great time to buy stock in a successful company, even if you don't like Bud Light.
The new reporting rules will force companies to disclose whether they are prioritizing climate change concerns.
The film dramatizes the pandemic-era mania around GameStop and WallStreetBets, but misunderstands the realities of financial markets.
According to a new Bloomberg report, Rivian has lost 93 percent of its market value since November 2021. The state of Georgia is still on the hook for as much as $1.5 billion in state incentives.
Stop limiting entrepreneurs’ ability to get funding from those they know best.
Excessive government interference in the market hurts consumers and thwarts policy goals. It also gets in the way of the government itself.
Politicians say they want to subsidize various industries, but they sabotage themselves by weighing the policies down with rules that have nothing to do with the plans.
A Netflix documentary series blames the SEC for missing the Ponzi scheme and then calls for giving the SEC more power.
Brokers will have to report every trade and the trader’s personal information.
Election betting markets are often more reliable than pundits. Did the site steal user funds? No. Did they lie to people? No. Harm anyone? No.
If lawmakers keep spending like they are, and if the Fed backs down from taming inflation, then the government may create a perfect storm.
The idea that the Fed has the knowledge necessary to control the economy with perfectly calibrated policies was always an illusion.
A livestreamed debate between Binyamin Appelbaum and Gene Epstein
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James Taylor croons while the stock market burns after another ugly report on inflation.
More airline workers and more flights—not bailouts and restrictions on mergers—is the better policy.
The economy is spinning, but we’ve proven there are viable ways to slow it down to more bearable levels.
Is crypto winter here?
Last week, the price of bitcoin fell to lows not seen since 2020 while a prominent stablecoin collapsed. Does this mean it was all a Ponzi scheme?
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But it will make the market worse.
Can’t work Zoom, will fix financial markets.
Some of them like the stock, but all of them think our financial system is broken.
The last thing this game-inspired, meme-powered finance fight needs is federal meddling.
The government is doing what it can to help out Big Money.
Even after government had imposed an almost unfathomable level of intervention on the economy, the markets are chugging along much better than expected.
It may be a statement about the decline of the dollar, but the best-case explanation of the resilient stock market is that it is sending us a positive message about a rapid recovery of both public health and corporate profits.
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Looking at better and worse projections.
The Sanders-Warren agenda of higher taxes, increased regulation, and more government control worries Wall Street
You need to be inoculated from some strange but popular notions about the economy.
If so, it could undercut one of Trump's best re-election selling points: the strong economy.
Dow Jones skyrockets on news that Steve Mnuchin is leading behind-the-scenes effort to reduce tariffs on China.
The Dow Jones has lost 500 points since President Donald Trump launched his trade war.
Nucor's stock price is down 16 percent since August. Executives say the fourth quarter will be even worse.
All we have to show for 9 years of economic expansion is record amounts of debt, and all long-term fiscal problems ignored.
The SEC wants to bar Musk from being an operator or director of any publicly held company for claiming he had a firm offer to take Tesla private at $420 a share.
The media empire's flagship paper has seen subscription rates boom with Trump in office. But can the good times last?
Markets respond to politics, but presidents shouldn't claim control.
Unions try to use good years to deflect attention from a growing problem.